1918 Calgary municipal election explained

Election Name:1918 Calgary municipal election
Country:Calgary
Type:Municipal
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1917 Calgary municipal election
Previous Year:1917
Next Election:1919 Calgary municipal election
Next Year:1919
Candidate1:Robert Colin Marshall
Popular Vote1:3,428
Percentage1:51.46%
Candidate2:Michael Copps Costello
Popular Vote2:3,234
Percentage2:48.54%
Map Size:350px
Mayor
Before Election:Michael Copps Costello
After Election:Robert Colin Marshall

The 1918 Calgary municipal election was held on December 9, 1918 to a Mayor and six Aldermen to sit on Calgary City Council. Additionally a Commissioner, three members for the Public School Board were elected.

There were twelve aldermen on city council, but five of the positions were already filled: Samuel Hunter Adams, Andrew Graham Broatch, Frank Roy Freeze, Annie Gale, and Albert Mahaffy were all elected to two-year terms in 1917 and were still in office. Robert Colin Marshall was elected as an Alderman in 1917 for a two-year term, but resigned to run for mayor.

A number of plebiscites were held, all requiring a majority to pass.

The election was held under the Single Transferable Voting/Proportional Representation (STV/PR) with the term for Alderman being two years and the Mayor being one year. The Alderman seat vacated by Marshall would be held by the 7th-place finisher in the election for a period of one year.[1]

Background

The election would take place during the 1918 influenza pandemic which was first reported in Calgary two months before the election on October 3, 1918 by 15 soldiers returning to Canada from the First World War. By November 30, 1918, the pandemic had effected almost every Alberta community with more than 26,000 cases.[2]

The Calgary Daily Herald would also set a "brilliant colored" flare above the Herald Building to announce the elected mayor, red should Marshall win and yellow should Costello be elected.

This would be the second municipal election held with the proportional vote system in Calgary, and there was an expectation there would be several invalid ballots due to electors marking preference with an "x" rather than numerically by preference. However, there would be far fewer spoiled ballots in the 1918 election then the 1917 election. Following the election the editors of the Calgary Daily Herald would comment on "carelessness" in the preparation of voters' lists which left many people without the ability to vote, stating "An inaccurate voters' list is almost worse than none at all".[3] [4]

Results

Public School Board

Quota necessary for election was 1,512.

PartyCandidate1st Preference%CountElected

Hospital Board

The quota was 544 votes.[5]

PartyCandidate1st Preference%CountElected

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. News: MARSHALL WINS OVER COSTELLO BY 194 MAJORITY . March 19, 2020 . The Calgary Daily Herald . 4905 . December 10, 1918 . 1.
  2. News: Zurowski . Monica . In 1918, Spanish flu pulled into Calgary on a train. Here's how the city coped . March 19, 2020 . Calgary Herald . March 13, 2020.
  3. News: Red Flare---Marshall Wins Yellow Flare---Costello Wins . March 19, 2020 . The Calgary Daily Herald . 4904 . December 9, 1918 . 1.
  4. News: VOTERS' LIST ERRORS . March 19, 2020 . The Calgary Daily Herald . 4906 . December 11, 1918 . 6.
  5. News: Election for Hospital Board is Determined After Lengthy Count . March 19, 2020 . The Calgary Daily Herald . 4906 . December 11, 1918 . 1.